Tall Damiyah is a small settlement mound with evidence of continuous occupation throughout the Iron Age, located in the flood plains of the Jordan Valley. Other archaeological evidence, such as pottery sherds, indicate additional human presence during the Late Bronze Bronze Age, Persian-Hellenistic periods, the Byzantine period, and the Ottoman period. Though recognized in travel writings as early as the 19th century,[3] large-scale archaeological investigations only began to take place since 2012. Among the finds at this site are two-headed horse-figurines dating to the Late Iron Age—common to the broader region, though somewhat more unique in the Levant specifically.[2] Remains of at least two buildings[clarification needed] have been investigated, including adjacent areas of differing elevations, thought to be used for strategic ends.[4][2][5][6]
Unlike similar, nearby sites, evidence at Tall Damiyah indicates continuous occupation history during the Iron Age. As put in a 2014 field report:
"Previously unknown in Near Eastern archaeology and even beyond, this systematic sedentary occupation forces scientists to widen their geographic scope, in order to understand how these people interacted with the surrounding area. Inhabitants of the Central Jordan Valley during Iron Age II and the Persian Period were unequivocally engaged in a continuing cycle of migration, returning to previously settled sites; in other words, searching for preferred areas but leading a sedentary way of life."[5]
Archaeologists surmise that the site was a "regional and interregional cultic place of gathering."[2]
^"Damiyah El-Jadideh". Middle Eastern Geo-database for Antiquities (MEGA Jordan). The Getty Conservation Institute and World Monuments Fund. 2010. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
^Mangles, James; Charles Leonard, Irby (1844). Travels in Egypt and Nubia, Syria, and the Holy Land: Including a Journey Round the Dead Sea, and Through the Country East of the Jordan. London: Bradbury and Evans, Printers, Whitefriars.
^ abPetit, Lucas P.; Kafafi, Zeidan (November 2018). "Tall Damiyah (2016–2017)". Archaeology in Jordan. 1: 35–36 – via publications.acorjordan.org.
^Bugbee, Lucius H. (1901). The Mosaic Map of Medeba. Chicago: University of Chicago. p. 8. Retrieved 19 August 2022. for the spelling Mazar and West Bank location.